Anonymous wrote:Obviously never worked in Africa if you think these countries are telling the truth about their number of cases. No Ebola in Nigeria? Ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Well last night on CNN Dr. Gupta said that Ebola effects different people differently. Sorry that someone coming from Africa vomiting on a plane is scary at this point.
Anonymous wrote:How does the CDC know that the Nigerian man who died on the plane to JFK after vomiting in his seat did not have Ebola? Did they take his body?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ebola virus no match for US health care
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/10/17/ebola-hospital-cdc-expert-voices/17377223/
Ebola is Rollin's life. A top expert for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Rollin has studied the pathogen for nearly three decades and has combated it in the remotest corners of the globe. He recently returned from a two-month stint on the front lines of the Ebola fight in Liberia and Guinea.
Rollin is in Dallas reviewing the Ebola response at Texas Health Presbyterian hospital, where nurses Nina Pham and Amber Vinson recently contracted the virus while caring for Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian and the first person to die from Ebola in the USA.
...
His time at the hospital has taught him a few things about Ebola in America: A) Hospital staffers need to be better trained to combat the virus, and B) Ebola doesn't stand a chance against the medical infrastructure of U.S. cities.
What happened at Texas Health Presbyterian hospital was the result of high-level gear and competent staff facing an unknown virus for the first time – not an irreversible collapse of competency, he said.
Good to hear - I felt the same way, ie that tbe hospital was floundering not due to incompetence but due to it hosting patient 0
Dis y'all know they have a UV sterilizing robot? I want one
Anonymous wrote:Ebola virus no match for US health care
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/10/17/ebola-hospital-cdc-expert-voices/17377223/
Ebola is Rollin's life. A top expert for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Rollin has studied the pathogen for nearly three decades and has combated it in the remotest corners of the globe. He recently returned from a two-month stint on the front lines of the Ebola fight in Liberia and Guinea.
Rollin is in Dallas reviewing the Ebola response at Texas Health Presbyterian hospital, where nurses Nina Pham and Amber Vinson recently contracted the virus while caring for Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian and the first person to die from Ebola in the USA.
...
His time at the hospital has taught him a few things about Ebola in America: A) Hospital staffers need to be better trained to combat the virus, and B) Ebola doesn't stand a chance against the medical infrastructure of U.S. cities.
What happened at Texas Health Presbyterian hospital was the result of high-level gear and competent staff facing an unknown virus for the first time – not an irreversible collapse of competency, he said.

Anonymous wrote:How many people are they tracing now? On airplanes, cruise ships, etc. who is paying for all this. This all started with one person, Mr. Duncan. He should have not been let in the country.
Anonymous wrote:Ebola virus no match for US health care
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/10/17/ebola-hospital-cdc-expert-voices/17377223/
Ebola is Rollin's life. A top expert for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Rollin has studied the pathogen for nearly three decades and has combated it in the remotest corners of the globe. He recently returned from a two-month stint on the front lines of the Ebola fight in Liberia and Guinea.
Rollin is in Dallas reviewing the Ebola response at Texas Health Presbyterian hospital, where nurses Nina Pham and Amber Vinson recently contracted the virus while caring for Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian and the first person to die from Ebola in the USA.
...
His time at the hospital has taught him a few things about Ebola in America: A) Hospital staffers need to be better trained to combat the virus, and B) Ebola doesn't stand a chance against the medical infrastructure of U.S. cities.
What happened at Texas Health Presbyterian hospital was the result of high-level gear and competent staff facing an unknown virus for the first time – not an irreversible collapse of competency, he said.
Anonymous wrote:Hmmm, I guess she either said it as a joke, or because she knew it was a great way to get top quality medical attention. Or she is mentally unstable.